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A**H
Exceptional Autobiography!!
An amazing informative and inspiring book!
A**R
Read it
Read it
P**R
Everyone needs to read this book… including kids.
This is one of the best books I read. It’s great for anyone looking to learn America’s true history, about black liberation, the black Panther party, our culture and America’s dedication to keeping the BIPOC community oppressed.
R**D
Epitome of Strong Black Woman
The quality of biographies and autobiographies is largely dependent upon the life lived by the individual and how the story is told. Someone could have lived a full and exciting life but tell about it in a drab, dull way. Whereas someone could have lived a mundane, boring life but narrated it in a colorful and interesting way.Assata lived a very interesting life, much different than the majority of us, and she told her story in an uncomplicated and intriguing manner. I had never heard of Assata Shakur until I saw her named mentioned in another book I was reading. Now I'm quite upset that I didn't know about her sooner or that I hadn't read her story when I was younger.Assata's simple yet powerful story of her life in New York as a young woman searching for a way to best serve her people is amazing. I absolutely love her toughness, her mindset and her ability to think for herself. Although she joined the Black Panther Party she was not hesitant to point out its flaws and what they needed to do to improve. She took a critical thinking approach to everything she did though her actions weren't completely devoid of emotion.What happened to her as an adult is eerily similar to what happened to so many other freedom fighters/Black activists in the 60's and 70's: they were either killed or imprisoned. Fortunately, she wasn't killed though it wasn't for lack of trying. That night of May 2, 1973 had death sentence written all over it. But she survived and fought one legal battle after the next until the system finally succeeded in putting her away. It was a matter of: "we have the resources and the means and you do not."Assata was an amazing woman and it literally radiates from the pages. And she tells her story in a straightforward way. She's not trying to exhibit how much she knows or even how much she's done. It is not a verbose book with $10 words in there to wow the reader. It is a simple no-nonsense telling of what her life was like in the Black urban areas of New York as a child, how she became the pro-Black woman she became and how a system of institutionalized racism ran her over with their 20 ton train.She conspicuously and wisely omits a lot of names and details when it comes to some of her movements and meetings during her Panther days and, of course, of her escape from prison. Still, you learn all you need to know about Assata and the powers that she was up against. But she named herself Assata Olugbala Shakur for a reason:"Assata means 'She who struggles,' Olugbala means 'Love for the people,' ...Shakur means 'the thankful.'" I would say that she embodied all of that and I'M thankful she lived the life she lived, told the story she told and I'm thankful I got a chance to read and appreciate it.
J**E
ASSATA Shakur autobiography
This book shows how evil the government and its institutions can be, they have used all their powers to go after black peoples
G**R
Sister Queen Assata Olugbala Shakur changed my life with her story
Written more than 30 years ago, it is a travesty how topical and timely Ms. Sharkur's words seem in 2015. The fact that this woman is on the FBI's list of most wanted "terrorists" is truly disgusting; the evil of the illegal, inhumane, and cruel treatment she endured while wrongfully imprisoned and given "trial" reaches beyond any skill I have with language to describe. Ms. Angela Davis is wise to point out to the reader in the foreword that Ms. Shakur truly does gloss over the depravity of what was inflicted upon her. It is clear that she did not write this to say "look at what they did to me." It is so much more than Ms. Shakur laying out the clear-as-day facts that outline her innocence. There is of course a (justified) level of response to the smear-campaign waged against her, and statements that begin to hint at the level of hell she endured, but it is so much more. In the text she discusses the necessity of learning the history and heroes of a people to be aligned with their struggle in relation to her own education about Puerto Ricans. I see her choice to detail her childhood just as much, if not more, than her experience as a young adult revolutionary or as a political prisoner as an incredible opportunity to accept the gift of a contextual historical education of a heroine of this struggle, to feel the lifelong pain of this beautiful woman, and to see her prevail. I also deeply appreciated her willingness to critique the BPP's adherence to dogma and its patriarchy. I could write pages about all of the things to which Ms. Shakur opened my eyes. I am so glad that I was compelled to buy and read this book. I read it in two days, I could hardly put it down. Do not believe the lies. Do the research. Assata Olugbala Shakur does not hate white people; she loves Black people. Assata Olugbala Shakur is not a bank-robber or a cop-killer. Assata Olugbala Shakur is a force for the common good of all human beings. "I was in communion with all the forces on the earth that truly love people, in communion with all the revolutionary forces on the earth."
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